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October 2006

• Oct. 26, 2006 - The Ten Most Dangerous Online Activities

I'll admit it.  I'm a stickler for online security.  I also know that most people give very little thought to it.  I shudder to think of the number of computers I've seen that haven't had their antivirus software updated since they came out of the box 3 or 4 years ago.  When I ask the owners about it, the standard response is, "I thought it just did it automatically."

Protecting your computer has gotten a lot more complicated than just having an up to date antivirus, but it's amazing how many people don't even have that.

There seem to be three different attitude when it comes to security:

  1. I'm doing everything possible to be secure.
  2.  I don't have to worry about it, nothing bad will happen to me 
  3.  I don't know anything about it so I'll just ignore it.

As you can imagine, attitude number 1 is the one you should have.

So is your computer, or your network safe?  Despite all the software you have installed, how you, or others on your network, act will answer that question.  Forbes.com posted an excellent and enlightening article yesterday, The Ten Most Dangerous Online Activities.

Here's their list, but I urge you to take time to read the article.  After you've read it, take their advice and "stick this list up on your office door. Better yet, post it to the company bulletin board. If it keeps just one person from making a big mistake, it will have been worth the effort."

  1. Clicking on e-mail attachments from unknown senders
  2. Installing unauthorized applications
  3. Turning off or disabling automated security tools.
  4. Opening HTML or plain-text messages from unknown senders
  5. Surfing gambling, porn or other dicey Web sites
  6. Giving out passwords, tokens or smart cards.
  7. Random surfing of unknown, untrusted Web sites.
  8. Attaching to any old Wi-Fi network
  9. Filling out Web scripts, forms or registration pages
  10. Participating in chat rooms or social networking sites.
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• Oct. 12, 2006 - Woe Be Gone, Taxpayers

This has nothing to do with real estate, but I think it's important enough that I'm posting it anyway.

Woe Be Gone, Taxpayers

"A Prairie Home Companion," creator Garrison Keillor’s paean to rustic simplicity and old-time music, vaulted from its weekly slot on National Public Radio to big screens throughout the United States, Canada and Europe last summer — and was recently released for home video. Cruising on gentle reviews, the Robert Altman film promises to turn a pretty penny for investors, who will likewise cash in on the hit soundtrack and slew of other spin-off merchandise. But woe is to anyone who dares suggest ending taxpayer subsidies to Mr. Keillor’s gourmet meal ticket.

Some 4 million listeners tune in weekly to "A Prairie Home Companion," and the film of the same name captures much of the humor and eclectic — often exhilarating — music that’s made the show among the most popular aired on public radio. Indeed, there is much to recommend the film, from Altman’s singular vision to the performances of A-list actors such as Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Lily Tomlin and, yes, even Lindsay Lohan. Keillor plays himself as the master of ceremonies overseeing the final broadcast of the radio show, which is the heart of the movie’s storyline.

One can safely assume that Keillor negotiated a hefty sum for his star turn and screenwriting credit, quite likely including a cut of box office receipts and video sales. He also owns the merchandise trademarks. The film cost investors a mere $10 million to produce, which was recouped through a distribution deal long before the movie premiered. Everything else is gravy (like that poured over the Powder Milk™ biscuits in PHC’s fake ads).

It’s doubtful, however, that Keillor will take a page from last year’s "Cinderella Man," the comeback hero of Ron Howard’s film who, after winning a heavyweight match, repays the public assistance he "borrowed" during the Depression.

Keillor’s radio show is produced by American Public Media, which is the production and distribution service of Minnesota Public Radio. Eleven percent of MPR’s operating income comes compliments of taxpayers through payments from the government-funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Moreover, each of the 589 public radio stations that carry "A Prairie Home Companion" pay broadcast rights based on audience size. For example, a radio station with a potential audience of 400,000 listeners, such as WCMU out of Mt. Pleasant, Mich., pays $14,000 annually to air "A Prairie Home Companion." Stations with larger audiences pay more. Station budgets are funded, in part, by taxpayers through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, federal grants and contracts, as well as subsidies from state colleges and universities.

Public radio stations also must pay membership dues ranging from $2,000 to $5,000 annually to American Public Media. Tickets to a live taping of the show run between $55 and $175.

It is also worth noting that Keillor has been using his taxpayer-subsidized radio show to plug the film.

"A Prairie Home Companion" is also underwritten by Toyota, Select Comfort and Watkins. It is ironic, then, that the movie plot revolves around corporate bigwigs canceling the radio show out of greed. The axe-man, portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones, is a Texan businessman (read "cultural boob") who is depicted as so clueless, for example, that he doesn’t recognize the likeness of F. Scott Fitzgerald, the theater’s namesake.

As often happens in Hollywood depictions of art versus commerce, "A Prairie Home Companion" parades as high culture while biting the hand that feeds it. Executives of Toyota et al can decide for themselves how to expend their shareholders’ dollars, but it’s long past the time to free American taxpayers from subsidizing Keillor and his public radio companions.

#####

Bruce Edward Walker is science editor at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute headquartered in Midland, Mich. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that the author and the Center are properly cited.

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